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Jun 16, 2013
06/13
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WJLA
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our science teacher helped us build it. ♪ now i'm a geologist at chevron, and i get to help science teachers. it has four servo motors and a wireless microcontroller. over the last three years we've put nearly 100 million dollars into american education. that's thousands of kids learning to love science. ♪ isn't that cool? and that's pretty coolol. ♪ >> earlier president obama said the use of chemical weapons was a gamente changer. assist tons syria's rebel forces will increase now. about 90,000 killed with chemical weapons. john mccain sizz if we can't establish a no fly zone then taxpayer dollars have been waisted. shoot his aircraft down. charles how has the game changed now? >>t's all up to one man. the tragedy is it's all up to one. the recommendations from the c.i.a., defense department and senior people was he had to do something and he didn't do anything. he treats this instead of high state craft which it is as a csi episode. now he's got the evidence. the tragedy here is this. we're at a point are the rebels re deeply in distress. iran is in the game. the russians have flooded
our science teacher helped us build it. ♪ now i'm a geologist at chevron, and i get to help science teachers. it has four servo motors and a wireless microcontroller. over the last three years we've put nearly 100 million dollars into american education. that's thousands of kids learning to love science. ♪ isn't that cool? and that's pretty coolol. ♪ >> earlier president obama said the use of chemical weapons was a gamente changer. assist tons syria's rebel forces will increase now....
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Jan 24, 2013
01/13
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MSNBC
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that's science. that's just science. >> well, who wouldn't want to start their day with pictures of adorable puppies? the team photos for the 2013 puppy bowl have been released and the canines look like they're ready to roll. the big game goes down during that other big game on sunday february 3rd. >>> lindsay lohan's film "the canyons" is rejected by yet another film festival. shocker. an ugliness -- this is a quote, ugliness and deadness to it. >>> kate middle ton's portrait artist is lashing out saying criticism he received was extremely personal and hurtful. >> is she smiling? >> i think it's a lovely photo. the portrait doesn't photograph well. >> she's a lot prettier than that. >> the voice of charlie brown was arrested near the mexican border on charges of stalking and threatening an exgirlfriend. >>> and finally, remember this famous line? >> you killed my father. prepare to die! >> some passengers on a new zealand bound flight didn't recall that line and they became fright ened when a man we
that's science. that's just science. >> well, who wouldn't want to start their day with pictures of adorable puppies? the team photos for the 2013 puppy bowl have been released and the canines look like they're ready to roll. the big game goes down during that other big game on sunday february 3rd. >>> lindsay lohan's film "the canyons" is rejected by yet another film festival. shocker. an ugliness -- this is a quote, ugliness and deadness to it. >>> kate...
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Feb 7, 2013
02/13
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CSPAN2
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i'm excited to be on the committee because they truly do believe in science and what science can do in iraq in the above-mentioned innovations that come out of the federal government's role in science is important to me. i wanted to talk about ms. jackson and her testimony about collaboration between government and business and also mr. templeton discussed examples of public r&d partnerships in the semiconductor industry. in livermore, california, with innovation for granted pants transportation excellence, a public or the partnership to support small businesses and maximize economic potential of transportation in clean energy technology. it's a partnership with the city and the surrounding communities. sandia laboratories in austin university of california, berkeley and davis campuses. my question is are just starting to see the projects get off the ground, but if you can imagine the biggest challenge is access to capital, to have an incubator setting where you can have small startups come in medium startups come in and do the work to create local made in america jobs. the couple ques
i'm excited to be on the committee because they truly do believe in science and what science can do in iraq in the above-mentioned innovations that come out of the federal government's role in science is important to me. i wanted to talk about ms. jackson and her testimony about collaboration between government and business and also mr. templeton discussed examples of public r&d partnerships in the semiconductor industry. in livermore, california, with innovation for granted pants...
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Mar 25, 2013
03/13
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CSPAN
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this isn =1 science -- this is science. it was an experience. he and i went together to see what we could do in his particular case, and he wrote about it in his columns into "vanity fair" magazine and then the book. "vanitys columns in fair" magazine and then in the book. it is an amazing time right now. >> i know you were running the human genome project. what does that mean? what does "genome" mean? of anis all of the dna organism. that is the hereditary material that gets passed from parent to child that carries all of the hereditary information. it was figured out back in 1953 to be a double helix. it carries that information in a remarkably elegant and deceptively simple way with just is.r chemical bas it is a book written in a funny language with just four alphabets in its language. we abbreviate them. t.c, g, and many people think we should have and d. them a, b, c, and all other organisms use that same language, that same concept of the genome. this is over hundreds of millions of years to result in the enormous diversity of species aro
this isn =1 science -- this is science. it was an experience. he and i went together to see what we could do in his particular case, and he wrote about it in his columns into "vanity fair" magazine and then the book. "vanitys columns in fair" magazine and then in the book. it is an amazing time right now. >> i know you were running the human genome project. what does that mean? what does "genome" mean? of anis all of the dna organism. that is the hereditary...
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Nov 8, 2013
11/13
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CSPAN2
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i do not dispiewt that the science of carbon capture and storage -- i do not dispute the science. i'm dubious many of the claim with respect to the permanence and ethics of such storage. i object to the use as a mechanism to extract more fossil fuels from the earth that, for the most part, be burned for energy. implying, enhanced oil recovery is a form of fuel switching from coal to oil that works against the effort to reduce carbon -- and protect the environment. ly quote from page 280. the epa acknowledges that the can be downstream losses after capture. for example, during transportation injection or storage. a well-selected and operated site is expected to contain co, 2 for a long-term. there's will a potential for unanticipated leakage. they expect the loss to be modest with incentives due to the market use of co2 is as a product purchase. there remains an issue of whether the standard i.t. should be adjusted to reflect these downstream losses. the epa is not proposing go so. more over the epa wishes to encourage rather than discourage eor using co2 since it makes carbon stor
i do not dispiewt that the science of carbon capture and storage -- i do not dispute the science. i'm dubious many of the claim with respect to the permanence and ethics of such storage. i object to the use as a mechanism to extract more fossil fuels from the earth that, for the most part, be burned for energy. implying, enhanced oil recovery is a form of fuel switching from coal to oil that works against the effort to reduce carbon -- and protect the environment. ly quote from page 280. the...
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or we can choose to believe in the overwhelming judgment of science and act before it's too late though most of us choose science but the issue is what do we do about it it's one thing to pledge a commitment to doing something about climate change it's another thing to actually do something about climate change yes there are some specifics for the sake of our children and our future. we must do more to combat climate change so tonight i propose we use some more oil and gas revenues to fund an energy security trust that will drive new research and technology to shift our cars and trucks off the world for good i'm also issuing a new goal for america let's cut in half the energy wasted by our homes and businesses over the next twenty years sounds like a decent start but given the size of the problem and the consequences of not addressing it we should be looking for more than just decent starts we need urgent revolutionary change in how we generate and consume energy in this nation in twenty years not in ten years now because right now at this rate we're looking at a five degree increase in
or we can choose to believe in the overwhelming judgment of science and act before it's too late though most of us choose science but the issue is what do we do about it it's one thing to pledge a commitment to doing something about climate change it's another thing to actually do something about climate change yes there are some specifics for the sake of our children and our future. we must do more to combat climate change so tonight i propose we use some more oil and gas revenues to fund an...
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Oct 7, 2013
10/13
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MSNBC
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join exxonmobil in advancing math and science education. let's solve this. >>> big new study out on a major and somewhat controversial set of academic goals for schools around the country known as common core. so far 45 states and the district of columbia have adopted these benchmarks. scholastic and the bill and melinda gates foundation just released results of its survey of more than 20,000 teachers and the results are a little bit surprising. more than half of teachers in common core states say the standards will be positive overall for most students. only 8% say it would be negative. we're taking a closer look at part of our annual education nation summit for 2013. joining me now are vicki phillips, director of education for the bill and melinda gates foundation, and margery mayer, president of the scholastic foundation. great of both of you to come in. vicki, why has there been so much controversy about common core? >> i think as you can tell from teachers not so much controversy. they're very aware of it, very positive about it and un
join exxonmobil in advancing math and science education. let's solve this. >>> big new study out on a major and somewhat controversial set of academic goals for schools around the country known as common core. so far 45 states and the district of columbia have adopted these benchmarks. scholastic and the bill and melinda gates foundation just released results of its survey of more than 20,000 teachers and the results are a little bit surprising. more than half of teachers in common...
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we've recently seen science and bill mckibben who. many of your listeners and viewers know. it was the first to bring this to public attention but several years ago there was a scientific study with twenty or thirty if it was twenty six actually the world's top scientists and they determined that we have a carbon budget and that we we've used much of that budget up and in fact two thirds of the fossil energy proven reserves around the world have to stay underground we can't pick them up and still save ourselves from the worst consequences of climate change the international energy agency now is confirmed out and says the same thing that we have to leave those resources in the ground now those are assets trillions of dollars of assets that the possibility companies used to evaluate their worth in the stock market and so on so the fact that we need to straddle them leave them underground is not going over well in those industries but in fact if we want to head off the worst uncontrollable from climate change that's what we have to do shouldn't that also cause us to prioritize
we've recently seen science and bill mckibben who. many of your listeners and viewers know. it was the first to bring this to public attention but several years ago there was a scientific study with twenty or thirty if it was twenty six actually the world's top scientists and they determined that we have a carbon budget and that we we've used much of that budget up and in fact two thirds of the fossil energy proven reserves around the world have to stay underground we can't pick them up and...
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Jan 19, 2013
01/13
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CSPAN
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we have made enormous strides in science and industry and agriculture. we have shared our wealth more broadly than ever. we have learned at last to manage a modern economy to assure its continued growth. we have given freedom new reach. we have begun to make its promise real for black as well as for white. we see the hope of tomorrow in the youth of today. i know america's youth. i believe in them. we can be proud that they are better educated, more committed, more passionately driven by conscience than any generation in our history. no people has ever been so close to the achievement of a just and abundant society, or so possessed of the will to achieve it. and because our strengths are so great, we can afford to appraise our weaknesses with candor and to approach them with hope. standing in this same place a third of a century ago, franklin delano roosevelt addressed a nation ravaged by depression and gripped in fear. he could say in surveying the nation's troubles -- "they concern, thank god, only material things." our crisis today is in reverse. we f
we have made enormous strides in science and industry and agriculture. we have shared our wealth more broadly than ever. we have learned at last to manage a modern economy to assure its continued growth. we have given freedom new reach. we have begun to make its promise real for black as well as for white. we see the hope of tomorrow in the youth of today. i know america's youth. i believe in them. we can be proud that they are better educated, more committed, more passionately driven by...
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May 30, 2013
05/13
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CSPAN2
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in political science from the university of maryland. please welcome dr. mcintyre. [applause] first lieutenant directly to my left brew up in seaside, ore. think he is back in the great northwest now. he was a high-school football player and a student body president at seaside high school, class of 1963 were is father was principled. he won a national merit scholarship at yale university. member of jonathan edwards college. he played wing forward for yale's rugby team, of rhodes scholar at the university college in oxford, and it was from university college in oxford that he was called to active duty as an infantry officer in the united states marine corps. after his military service returned to oxford and earned a master's degree. he made his living as a national business consultant in the coming month in singapore, and france. he is the author of a novel of the vietnam war, a top-10 best seller published in 2010. sebastian's youngbear declared mater or more of the most profound and devastating novels ever to come out of vietnam. received a 2011 washington but stay
in political science from the university of maryland. please welcome dr. mcintyre. [applause] first lieutenant directly to my left brew up in seaside, ore. think he is back in the great northwest now. he was a high-school football player and a student body president at seaside high school, class of 1963 were is father was principled. he won a national merit scholarship at yale university. member of jonathan edwards college. he played wing forward for yale's rugby team, of rhodes scholar at the...
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Oct 26, 2013
10/13
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CSPAN
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science technology, engineering and math represented in the nasa portfolio. healthy nasa is a flywheel that society caps on for innovations. >> over the past 15 years, book tv has prepared over 14,000 -- over 40,000 programs. span tv, every weekend on c- two. >> this is his third visit to the state in three months. i would traditionally holds the nation's first provincial caucuses. other speakers at tonight's inner -- dinner includes iowa governor terry branstad and iowa senator chuck grassley. >> i wouldn't have thought of -- tomorrow morning, if any of you are going to be in the race for the cure, and you don't run any faster than 11 minute mile, i would like to have you run with me if you would. 9:00 on capitol hill. and come up afterwards and tell me who you are and where we will meet there, because there'll be about 25,000 people in that run. all, usually, somebody says he needs no introduction. so that's why i stood here. and you introduce me. thank you so much for your kind words. and thanks to all of you for giving me an opportunity to serve you and t
science technology, engineering and math represented in the nasa portfolio. healthy nasa is a flywheel that society caps on for innovations. >> over the past 15 years, book tv has prepared over 14,000 -- over 40,000 programs. span tv, every weekend on c- two. >> this is his third visit to the state in three months. i would traditionally holds the nation's first provincial caucuses. other speakers at tonight's inner -- dinner includes iowa governor terry branstad and iowa senator...
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Oct 30, 2013
10/13
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CNNW
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. ♪ it's not rocket science. it's just common sense. from td ameritrade. it's just common sense. humans -- even when we cross our "t's" and dot our "i's," we still run into problems. that's why liberty mutual insurance offers accident forgiveness with our auto policies. if you qualify, your rates won't go up due to your first accident. because making mistakes is only human, and so are we. we also offer new car replacement, so if you total your new car, we give you the money for a new one. call liberty mutual insurance at... and ask us all about our auto features, like guaranteed repairs, where if you get into an accident and use one of our certified repair shops, your repairs are guaranteed for life. so call... to talk with an insurance expert about everything that comes standard with our base auto policy. and if you switch, you could save up to $423. liberty mutual insurance. responsibility. what's your policy? >>> before the break you were watching my interview with rahm emanuel now halfway through his term here. he has major problems plaguing his city like closing a $340 milli
. ♪ it's not rocket science. it's just common sense. from td ameritrade. it's just common sense. humans -- even when we cross our "t's" and dot our "i's," we still run into problems. that's why liberty mutual insurance offers accident forgiveness with our auto policies. if you qualify, your rates won't go up due to your first accident. because making mistakes is only human, and so are we. we also offer new car replacement, so if you total your new car, we give you the...
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Mar 31, 2013
03/13
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KRCB
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and other intervention science and medicine. do you think that religion as we know today will endure in the united states. >> absolutely. there's a paradox here. there's an element of hypocrisy here. how many of those people went to las vegas or sitting at home watching "desperate housewives." or participate in a reality show. >> it's the consumer society. >> so you feel that the religion is here to stay. >> religion is absolutely here to stay. the fact that sinners this is no news to christian people across the country. >> thanks so much for being my guest. our time has expired, sand merr ?o
and other intervention science and medicine. do you think that religion as we know today will endure in the united states. >> absolutely. there's a paradox here. there's an element of hypocrisy here. how many of those people went to las vegas or sitting at home watching "desperate housewives." or participate in a reality show. >> it's the consumer society. >> so you feel that the religion is here to stay. >> religion is absolutely here to stay. the fact that...
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Oct 6, 2013
10/13
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MSNBCW
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both of you are in science/technology. you're concerned as well. >> i work with high schools and middle schools and elementary schools. i did a report called running on empty about not just the lack of technology in our schools but the lack of quality, rigorous technology education. 50% of the jobs in our country since world war ii have been created in the technology industry. yet, less than 3% of our undergraduate majors choose to study computer science and technology. so we need to do more to give them an idea at the high school level what technology is and not make them users of technology in this country but creators of the next generation. >> where are you from again? >> i'm from new york city. >> arianna, you're from new york as well. you're worried relating to the core standards as well as technology. it's a double header for you, if you will. >> yes, absolutely. i'm a technology teacher in the south bronx. i also help lead a nonprofit in the south bronx that expands the school day and creates community schools. >>
both of you are in science/technology. you're concerned as well. >> i work with high schools and middle schools and elementary schools. i did a report called running on empty about not just the lack of technology in our schools but the lack of quality, rigorous technology education. 50% of the jobs in our country since world war ii have been created in the technology industry. yet, less than 3% of our undergraduate majors choose to study computer science and technology. so we need to do...
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Jan 10, 2013
01/13
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CSPAN
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but, queue management, there is clearly a science and an to it. in retailing, there is a phenomenon of people queuing up to pay for products at checkout registers, and over the years, retail managers have noticed when there are more than six individuals in the line, people begin to lay down merchandise and walked out of the store. they have a different incentive, obviously, for management there, but i do wonder at how good we are in queue management in election, and often you see on balanced cues, where at the check-in table, they are long, but short at the testing table, and long out the building. as we talk today, one of the things the eac is doing is taking notes about predominant issues to see if we can identify existing best practices that we might be able to identify out of these jurisdictions or share. so, thank you loretta? >> good morning. i have been working with the voting process in washington, d.c., for several years now. i was a former coal worker, precinct technician, -- poll workers, precinct technician, i was not part of the early
but, queue management, there is clearly a science and an to it. in retailing, there is a phenomenon of people queuing up to pay for products at checkout registers, and over the years, retail managers have noticed when there are more than six individuals in the line, people begin to lay down merchandise and walked out of the store. they have a different incentive, obviously, for management there, but i do wonder at how good we are in queue management in election, and often you see on balanced...
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Apr 16, 2013
04/13
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FOXNEWS
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. ♪ it's not rocket science. it's just common sense. from td ameritrade. >>> continuing coverage of breaking news now 11 minutes before the hour, impact spreading far beyond the finish line of the mayorra hon. cities around the world on heightened alert from los angeles to washington, d.c., london, new york. london the site of the next big international marathon on sunday. here in new york cops packed the streets setting up presence in times square, various stations, police helicopters patrolling skies and officers with bomb-sniffing dogs searching the airports. scenes like this across the nation in the wake of a terrorist attack. eric shawn is live in times square tonight. it looks quiet. >> hello. yes. hello. there are a lot of police out. the car bomb three years ago that did not go off. tonight the mayor michael bloomberg says there is no information about anything here in new york city but they're not taking any chances plans are in place. a thousand counter terrorist police officers and others throughout the city, subway, commuter
. ♪ it's not rocket science. it's just common sense. from td ameritrade. >>> continuing coverage of breaking news now 11 minutes before the hour, impact spreading far beyond the finish line of the mayorra hon. cities around the world on heightened alert from los angeles to washington, d.c., london, new york. london the site of the next big international marathon on sunday. here in new york cops packed the streets setting up presence in times square, various stations, police...
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Jun 25, 2013
06/13
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CURRENT
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it oop plies to social issues and science and the environment as well. so i don't think it's a bad idea to try to tackle it it's just a question of whether there is going to be progress. and donnie made a good point as much as people are coming around to the idea that it should be done, the idea of making it urgent is still not there. >> michael: yeah, and i think that's really important. and that's tricky too on how to get people to make that a priority. >> let me offer a quick idea. when we as americans, roll down your window after eating a hamburger from the drive through and role down your window and toss your trash out the window the police will give you a ticket. as we toss pollution outside of our tail pipe, no one is making us pay. these big multi-billion dollars companies are not paying for that. >> michael: and he said all right. we're not going to win jay rockefeller's seat in west virginia now but we take some sacrifice. president obama with a profile in courage. i want to turn now to the irs, david. we have a new acronym to add, bolo. or be
it oop plies to social issues and science and the environment as well. so i don't think it's a bad idea to try to tackle it it's just a question of whether there is going to be progress. and donnie made a good point as much as people are coming around to the idea that it should be done, the idea of making it urgent is still not there. >> michael: yeah, and i think that's really important. and that's tricky too on how to get people to make that a priority. >> let me offer a quick...
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May 2, 2013
05/13
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CNNW
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it's an emernling science, jake. those are a couple more concrete examples of what the neuro scientists are talking about. >> fascinating. thank you so much. adrian raines will join sanjay this weekend to talk about the anatomy of violence. tune in saturday at 4:30 p.m. eastern, sunday at 7:30 in the morning right here on cnn. >>> conservatives swooned when dr. ben carson challenged president obama over his health care plan. up next i'll ask the republican rising star what he thinks about gun control and what does it take for disney to cut ties with an entire country? find out how they're snapping into action after a tragedy coming up in our buried lead. dry cleaning done. gift for your aunt... done. today, we're gonna be talking about your body after baby. yep. we're done. okay. let's get some lunch. yes! [ laughs ] all right! yes, honey. all natural -- everything. done. oh! i forgot the check. [ camera clicks ] done. [ female announcer ] on your phone, online, on the go. wells fargo makes it easy to get banking don
it's an emernling science, jake. those are a couple more concrete examples of what the neuro scientists are talking about. >> fascinating. thank you so much. adrian raines will join sanjay this weekend to talk about the anatomy of violence. tune in saturday at 4:30 p.m. eastern, sunday at 7:30 in the morning right here on cnn. >>> conservatives swooned when dr. ben carson challenged president obama over his health care plan. up next i'll ask the republican rising star what he...
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Nov 9, 2013
11/13
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CNNW
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because science seem to be solving that and i think once again, the kennedy matter. i think science within the last ten years has come one some very important discoveries that tell us that ken was actually killed by a shot from the right front. >> so you're saying did not act alone and that day there were others there. how many? >> absolutely. two, three, who knows? what is clear is that kennedy was killed by a shot from the right front. he was not shot from the depository. >> let me ask you, what is the significance? let me emphasize, a sit go secretary of state. this isn't just some person. a person with knowledge, gravitas, a person close to the family. he volunteered on the ted kennedy campaign. he served for 24 years as senator from massachusetts. do we assume this isn't just john kerry talking? this is coming out of discussions he might have had with the kennedy family? >> i don't think we can make that assumption. i think you answered your own question which is kerry is not average joe. he is the secretary of state, former senator from massachusetts. it carrie
because science seem to be solving that and i think once again, the kennedy matter. i think science within the last ten years has come one some very important discoveries that tell us that ken was actually killed by a shot from the right front. >> so you're saying did not act alone and that day there were others there. how many? >> absolutely. two, three, who knows? what is clear is that kennedy was killed by a shot from the right front. he was not shot from the depository. >>...
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Dec 31, 2013
12/13
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CSPAN2
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>> mary roach explains the science behind the human digestive system in "gulp." in "dirty wars," jeremy scahill, national security correspondent for the nation magazine, reports on america's covert operations. for an extended list and links to other publications' 2013 notable book selections, visit booktv's web site, booktv.org. >> now on booktv, historian william seale examines the transformation of washington, d.c.'s political and physical landscape between the spanish-american war and world war i. this program from the society of the cincinnati's anderson house in washington, d.c. is 40 minutes. [applause] >> thank you, emily, and good evening. it is a great pleasure to introduce william seale. i have known william for a very long time because he married my good friend and college classmate, lucinda smith. i married a brilliant historian, and so did she. [laughter] william seale is a charming and witty texas gentleman whose interest in history and buildings has fueled a long career in both. he is a native of beaumont, texas, holds a ba from southwestern univer
>> mary roach explains the science behind the human digestive system in "gulp." in "dirty wars," jeremy scahill, national security correspondent for the nation magazine, reports on america's covert operations. for an extended list and links to other publications' 2013 notable book selections, visit booktv's web site, booktv.org. >> now on booktv, historian william seale examines the transformation of washington, d.c.'s political and physical landscape between the...
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science technology innovation all the least i'm elements from around russia we've got the future covered. and. i would rather ask questions to people in positions of power instead of speaking on their behalf and that's why you can find my show larry king now right here on r.t. question for. welcome back with me for tonight's big picture politics panel are here we knew some mates we and chris thanks to all of you for joining us the house and senate negotiators to this conference committee headed up by the senate side patty murray and on the house side paul ryan a democrat and a republican respectively have announced a deal here's their. constant crisis cost us billions of dollars in lost growth and jobs and the continued across the board cuts from sequester ation we're forcing our families and communities to pay the price so i am very proud to stand here today with chairman ryan to announce we have broken through the partisanship and the gridlock and reached a bipartisan budget compromise that will prevent a government shutdown in january our deal with the deal increases federal spending
science technology innovation all the least i'm elements from around russia we've got the future covered. and. i would rather ask questions to people in positions of power instead of speaking on their behalf and that's why you can find my show larry king now right here on r.t. question for. welcome back with me for tonight's big picture politics panel are here we knew some mates we and chris thanks to all of you for joining us the house and senate negotiators to this conference committee headed...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Jun 9, 2013
06/13
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SFGTV
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wing and the 5, 6, and 7th grade science classroom and now you are coming down on revere and off the science classrooms on to where the green garden are and the tanks on the back are to collect the rain water to irrigate the fields and do the things that we need. we are swinging back down the multipurpose room which has windows that open on a spectacular view of bay, classrooms below, the library and the front door. >> wow. >> what? >> and 65 percent of the schools powered by solar on the roof which is pretty much the maximum amount of solar panels that you can put and we are going to own the solar. i can't have everything. any way so that is kind of where we are and i am happy to come back any time, for those of you that don't know the old willie brown is gone, golden gone and it is now sort of growing, nice grass and weeds and waiting for us to start. we are going to start the foundation and some of the grading fairly soon and we will be in full construction in the next 6 or 7 months as soon as we finish the design with the state architect. everything is in place and we are ready t
wing and the 5, 6, and 7th grade science classroom and now you are coming down on revere and off the science classrooms on to where the green garden are and the tanks on the back are to collect the rain water to irrigate the fields and do the things that we need. we are swinging back down the multipurpose room which has windows that open on a spectacular view of bay, classrooms below, the library and the front door. >> wow. >> what? >> and 65 percent of the schools powered by...
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Jan 9, 2013
01/13
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CSPAN2
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aimed # at the wrong program, she says, "hurt the nation in crucial areas like education, technology, science, and energy." what's on the table for cuts? no social security, no medicare, the major drivers of benefits, but are the drivers of debt and deficit. what's on the table for spending cuts? >> guest: okay. there's a lot of questions there. >> host: right. >> guest: first of all, you know, the major drivers of the current deficits are two things. tax cuts for the wealthy and wars in iraq and afghanistan. this has been well documented by economists. let's not pretend like grandmother is responsible for the deficits. she's not. i promise you. yeah, you know, what would define a spending cut, again, cutting the amount of money that would pay for prescription drugs. getting the same drugs for $130 billion cheaper by untying medicare and medicaid's hands and lay low them to negotiation. that's a cut to save money, impacting the big guy, not the little guy. you know, if we sub subsidize ie name of family farmers, agriculture corporations. we, warn in the campaign talk about a balanced, and the
aimed # at the wrong program, she says, "hurt the nation in crucial areas like education, technology, science, and energy." what's on the table for cuts? no social security, no medicare, the major drivers of benefits, but are the drivers of debt and deficit. what's on the table for spending cuts? >> guest: okay. there's a lot of questions there. >> host: right. >> guest: first of all, you know, the major drivers of the current deficits are two things. tax cuts for...
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Apr 12, 2013
04/13
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CSPAN2
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i am a junior science major here at howard university and a member of. my question is i believe that we must -- we must first define which republican party, and i want to ask you are we discussing the republican party before 19th century, abraham lincoln republican party or are we discussing post 1968 republican party richard nixon, ronald reagan, and my question to you is which one do you identify with? [applause] >> i think that is a great question and that hits the nail on the head exactly as to what our obstacles are because people, including those that may have just clapped conceded there are completely different parties and you don't object to the party of the emancipation and voting rights and citizenship and all that of the 13th to 14th and 15th amendment. the argument that i'm trying to make is we haven't changed, we don't talk about it. i need are going to convince you or not, but my argument is there are some of us who haven't changed who are still part of that party that you like they truly believe that ronald reagan was still part of that. w
i am a junior science major here at howard university and a member of. my question is i believe that we must -- we must first define which republican party, and i want to ask you are we discussing the republican party before 19th century, abraham lincoln republican party or are we discussing post 1968 republican party richard nixon, ronald reagan, and my question to you is which one do you identify with? [applause] >> i think that is a great question and that hits the nail on the head...
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120
Jan 29, 2013
01/13
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CURRENT
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they're earning degrees in the fields of the future like engineering and science. but once they finish school. once they earn that diploma there is a chance they have to leave our country. >> jennifer: i know you've been focused on domestic workers. but how could a visa program change the u.s. economy? >> well, i think he made a really good point and important point that we need to remember about the importance of people having the opportunity to stay and build a life here once they've been educated here. i also think that less than 5% of the entire workforce is undocumented, and most of those workers are paying working in low-wage, very dangerous vulnerable jobs. if we can bring them out of the shadows and invest in the quality of those jobs and a road to citizenship for those workers we can address economic inequality and create millions of quality good jobs to strengthen the economy for everyone. i think it's important to talk about the high-tech workers and the opportunities there and we should really think about how we're investing in the quality of low-wage j
they're earning degrees in the fields of the future like engineering and science. but once they finish school. once they earn that diploma there is a chance they have to leave our country. >> jennifer: i know you've been focused on domestic workers. but how could a visa program change the u.s. economy? >> well, i think he made a really good point and important point that we need to remember about the importance of people having the opportunity to stay and build a life here once...
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Nov 17, 2013
11/13
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CSPAN2
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politics has none of the elements of poetry and science but think of where they get the politics wrong even science says corrupted remember the late 1940's stalin decided that genetics remains the transition of characteristics that was proven 100 years earlier to be not true but stalin insisted on a new soviet genetics and do it and to not of the ultimate expression of the power of the corrupted and really everything that is hard and beautiful. that is why so many who want to wash their hands of today and understandably so is sovereign and must be. why i like medicine to enter a life of politics because in the end everything depends on getting the politics right. that is why because of what matters most in the end it is politics. and the book about hyper proliferation in the age we are about to enter into that i will not see that my age -- the age my son will live in it begins with the story of the great physicist. he is the man with the challenger disaster he could explain everything actually one of the young the scientists at lowe's alamos in would amuse himself in the spare hours by
politics has none of the elements of poetry and science but think of where they get the politics wrong even science says corrupted remember the late 1940's stalin decided that genetics remains the transition of characteristics that was proven 100 years earlier to be not true but stalin insisted on a new soviet genetics and do it and to not of the ultimate expression of the power of the corrupted and really everything that is hard and beautiful. that is why so many who want to wash their hands...
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Nov 27, 2013
11/13
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CSPAN2
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science advisory board such as, number one, the science advisory board and the clean air. number two, the clean air science advisory committee. you have called these panels in the pendant review boards. and your predecessor described him as being made up totally independent expert scientists. that's pretty well -- do you agree with acknowledging that still which are goal is and what you're trying to get? i would like to put into the record some information prepared by the congressional research service that calls into serious question the independence of the experts that sit on these committees. >> without objection it will be made a part of the record. >> according to the crs, almost 60% of the members of these two panels have received epa grants since 2000. that's totaling taxpayer-funded grants worth roughly $140 million. perhaps even worse, a majority of the members of the clean air science advisory committee, the panel tasked with critically evaluating the epa's articulate matter standards finalized at the end of 2012 had received -- so a majority had received epa gra
science advisory board such as, number one, the science advisory board and the clean air. number two, the clean air science advisory committee. you have called these panels in the pendant review boards. and your predecessor described him as being made up totally independent expert scientists. that's pretty well -- do you agree with acknowledging that still which are goal is and what you're trying to get? i would like to put into the record some information prepared by the congressional research...
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May 24, 2013
05/13
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CSPAN2
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i think we have to understand it's a continuum all of the sciences we learned about brain development, about skills qoment, about have job lair and all of those skills tell us it's a wise investment. as i understand i know we're in the drafting stage on the president's program. basically he's providing money to states for states to make the decisions about all they have to do is being willing invest in high quality. to improve the quality of the existing system and expand the system. they decide how they want to allocate this in what i haven't seen. it's not about us a telling the states but providing resources to help them meet the demand and the quality issues. >> senator, your point. on the first point of maintaining a high bar hopefully with reauthorization you have my commit. you've been a champion. i appreciate your leadership so much. one of the biggest benefit of the -- waivers which i don't think people understand, there are literally, literally hundreds of thousands of children with special needs, minority children, who were invisible under no child left behind. it was not t
i think we have to understand it's a continuum all of the sciences we learned about brain development, about skills qoment, about have job lair and all of those skills tell us it's a wise investment. as i understand i know we're in the drafting stage on the president's program. basically he's providing money to states for states to make the decisions about all they have to do is being willing invest in high quality. to improve the quality of the existing system and expand the system. they...
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Jul 14, 2013
07/13
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CSPAN2
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they will conduct these massive social science experiment on themselves. this is not the first time that they have done it. here they are back to earth again. and the oil industry. face the world. oil industry. so the book is very much how two civilizations have come to terms with one another. which is not easy the past 20 years have been a time of revolution. in the global oil imstory. so until sudden notly he you land on earth and you find yourself at least in the oil initial story. face with the a race. the question is how have the russians down in the race. talented. oil people that they are talent engineering cult that you remember they are. that is apart of the tree. the book has tragic heroes. one is in jail. and i wanted to avoid making this the story of mchale and yet in the end. this man that was briefly the richest man in russia and ran the most successful private oil company in russia at the time of his arrest. and 2003, this man had been in jail october 201 he would have been in jail for jail ten years. this is a match with his nemesis. vladim
they will conduct these massive social science experiment on themselves. this is not the first time that they have done it. here they are back to earth again. and the oil industry. face the world. oil industry. so the book is very much how two civilizations have come to terms with one another. which is not easy the past 20 years have been a time of revolution. in the global oil imstory. so until sudden notly he you land on earth and you find yourself at least in the oil initial story. face with...
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Mar 30, 2013
03/13
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CSPAN2
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fred and i are in this profession, the economist, 7200 years ago adopted dismal science. it is almost like nay saying, nothing good is going to come. the engineering evidence on the benefits of energy efficiency are massive. i have this book coming out, one thing i did with this other book, a lot of it, i read the study by the national academy of sciences called real prospects for energy efficiency. this is not an economist talking. this is the national academy of science coming together to have the best engineering research. and the benefits of efficiency in the national academy of science. on the other hand you have the . and engineering, the engineers don't know how economics will really work and the main argument from the orthodox economists and there is risk, there is hassle. and let these people in. they could be fever for. there is an article in one of the leading academic journals and economics which say there are no benefits for energy. and my response is if the engineering evidence is there. and to overcome what they are, and to build up the market. and that is
fred and i are in this profession, the economist, 7200 years ago adopted dismal science. it is almost like nay saying, nothing good is going to come. the engineering evidence on the benefits of energy efficiency are massive. i have this book coming out, one thing i did with this other book, a lot of it, i read the study by the national academy of sciences called real prospects for energy efficiency. this is not an economist talking. this is the national academy of science coming together to...
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science however it is companies not. deserve to benefit from their artwork a marriage they were building this americans i believe we've now added into a debate about patent trademark law but but i'm with thomas jefferson that a patent or copyright should not last more than three years it's three years is enough time to capture what you contributed because basically nothing came out of nothing everything is based on everything everybody everything everybody stands on the shoulders of somebody who's closer to you than you realize i don't think these unlimited. rules that we've put into place are and that's why i'm saying bill gates and monsanto the only person we need to provide some incentives we do need to provide some incentives. to be able to invest in things that really are going through but we can work that out but the point is china's actions all about trade and flexing political power than they are about any interest in protecting their people if they were interested in protecting their people they hold free electi
science however it is companies not. deserve to benefit from their artwork a marriage they were building this americans i believe we've now added into a debate about patent trademark law but but i'm with thomas jefferson that a patent or copyright should not last more than three years it's three years is enough time to capture what you contributed because basically nothing came out of nothing everything is based on everything everybody everything everybody stands on the shoulders of somebody...
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Nov 27, 2013
11/13
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the case act reviews the epa's integrated science assessment which delivers science in support of the clean air act. through transparent and open process we have also committed to enhancing agencies integrated risk information system assessment program. a strong scientifically rigorous iris program is of critical importance in the epa is in the process of enhancing the science of integrity of those assessments, enhancing the productivity of that program and increasing transparency so that issues are identified and debated early on in the process. in 2009 the epa made significant enhancements to irs's by announcing a new seven step assessment development process. since that time the national research council has made recommendations related to enhancing the development of the irs of assessments. the epa's making changes still to the irs program to enhance our ability to respond to those recommendations and to maintain our science integrity. these changes will help the epa produce more high-quality assessments each year in a timely and transparent manner to meet the needs of the agency
the case act reviews the epa's integrated science assessment which delivers science in support of the clean air act. through transparent and open process we have also committed to enhancing agencies integrated risk information system assessment program. a strong scientifically rigorous iris program is of critical importance in the epa is in the process of enhancing the science of integrity of those assessments, enhancing the productivity of that program and increasing transparency so that...
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Oct 19, 2013
10/13
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CSPAN2
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he created new discipline in this country, political science. he read a lot about politics, government, economics, history, and how they were melded into this new thing called political science. and after wilson realized he was not making a living as an attorney in atlanta he decided he was going to go to graduate school. one very good thing came out of his atlanta years and that was he had one big piece of business as a lawyer, and that was something that his family had thrown to him. there was some piece of property that needed some contracts done, legal work. so he went to georgia where he was tying up loose ends and where he, a presbyterian ministers son met a woman named ellen lou erickson who was a presbyterian ministers daughter. the two of them fell in love and had a real old-fashioned 19th century court should. a little more extensive than most because wilson, although he was desperate to marry her realize did not have the resources to do it just yet. they had an engagement that went on for several years during which time they exchanged
he created new discipline in this country, political science. he read a lot about politics, government, economics, history, and how they were melded into this new thing called political science. and after wilson realized he was not making a living as an attorney in atlanta he decided he was going to go to graduate school. one very good thing came out of his atlanta years and that was he had one big piece of business as a lawyer, and that was something that his family had thrown to him. there...
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134
May 28, 2013
05/13
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FOXNEWSW
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. >> sprago who teaches political science has turned his classroom into anti-republican strong hold. his >> california, as i say all the time on the record in print and on radio and on tv, is the last vestige of any real white. republicans are trying to prevent people of color and people of lower income from voting by requiring voter i.d. discovered and this is generally true, the least flexible voter in america, the person who is less likely to change their mind about anything is an old white guy. old white guys are stubborn son of a pitches,. >> bill: education at its best, wouldn't you say. tuition at usc more than $45,000 a year. couple days ago at the university of massachusetts, karl rove was insulted. [shouting] >> murder civilians.rism >> talk. >> murderer. >> bill: yesterday at howard university, senator rand paul was insulted. >> republicans still prize the sense of justice thatth mlk spoke of when he said that an unjust law is any law that a majority enforces on a minority but does not make binding upon itself? [ applause ] >> bill: the trend is undeniable. the far left in
. >> sprago who teaches political science has turned his classroom into anti-republican strong hold. his >> california, as i say all the time on the record in print and on radio and on tv, is the last vestige of any real white. republicans are trying to prevent people of color and people of lower income from voting by requiring voter i.d. discovered and this is generally true, the least flexible voter in america, the person who is less likely to change their mind about anything is...
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Apr 13, 2013
04/13
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biomedical research that will help create new jobs and advance the cause of the cure is an medical science. the new investment in health it will help us to continue the said -- they develop of electronic health systems that have huge potentials for improving care coronation and public health. for as our budget invests the future, it also helps to reduce the long-term deficit by making sure that programs like medicare are put on stable fiscal trajectory. medicare spending for beneficiary grew at an historically low rate of .4% in 2012. 4/10 of one percent in 2012. ink support to the successful in limitation of the affordable thatact saving provisions strengthen the program. the president's budget achieves even more savings. for example, it allows low income beneficiaries to get their prescription drugs at the lower medicare rates, resulting -- without sacrificing their drug benefits. in total, the budget would build on the affordable care act cost- containment measures, generating an additional 370 $1 billion in medicare savings over the next decades. using the deficit, and putting medicare
biomedical research that will help create new jobs and advance the cause of the cure is an medical science. the new investment in health it will help us to continue the said -- they develop of electronic health systems that have huge potentials for improving care coronation and public health. for as our budget invests the future, it also helps to reduce the long-term deficit by making sure that programs like medicare are put on stable fiscal trajectory. medicare spending for beneficiary grew at...
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103
Mar 26, 2013
03/13
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it is not a cultural science. it is hypocrisy. the way you that you're saying if marriage social goal is to create more human beings, why do we even let people who do not conceive be married? you are not even let him be a bull or homosexual people to be married. ask them why we can help society? the third thing is the way you are segregating our society to say a man and women can get married, to me it is the same arguments not to a segregated society. based on what? our social goal for marriage is to reproduce? >> the time is up. we really need to get this down. >> i'm going to try to speak as quickly as possible. i have a lot of sympathy for mr. whelan's for letting it take its course. how deep into people who say this is taking too long and all of the gay couples in states where they did not have these rights, how do you answer that? what is your response to that? >> it is an anthropology that all social scientists recognize, people on the left, and this is not something i have come up with. this is the consensus until it became
it is not a cultural science. it is hypocrisy. the way you that you're saying if marriage social goal is to create more human beings, why do we even let people who do not conceive be married? you are not even let him be a bull or homosexual people to be married. ask them why we can help society? the third thing is the way you are segregating our society to say a man and women can get married, to me it is the same arguments not to a segregated society. based on what? our social goal for marriage...
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90
Dec 5, 2013
12/13
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CSPAN2
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eye 90
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about the science advisory boards. and there is serious concern that the epa regulatory science has become somewhat of a closed loop the agency sets regulatory goals based on whatever motives those goals are based upon. then develops the funds and the science that it needs to justify those goals. the agency then creates its own regulations, and is solely responsible for interpreting those regulations. making matters even worse, the courts largely defer to the epa especially when questions involve the analysis of the science. therefore, the most critical requirement for america to trust this regulatory policy or system especially the regulations set forth by the epa is scientific integrity. unfortunately, as i say there are worries, and at least i seem to believe there seems to be serious reasons for being worried about it being a closed loop. it's not going give us the type of science we need. believe there are especially this is evident in -- you were discussing with my colleague from oregon. the independent peer revi
about the science advisory boards. and there is serious concern that the epa regulatory science has become somewhat of a closed loop the agency sets regulatory goals based on whatever motives those goals are based upon. then develops the funds and the science that it needs to justify those goals. the agency then creates its own regulations, and is solely responsible for interpreting those regulations. making matters even worse, the courts largely defer to the epa especially when questions...
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Nov 28, 2013
11/13
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>> the science -- for the science advisory board, we believe epa meets and exceeds responsibilities. our legal requirements and transparent and look more closely to ensure that we look at the government board as well. we're proud of this, and when we do panels and put them together, we publish the consideration of the panel members, ask for comments on that that, and make sure the penalties put together are well-balanced and have all range of expertise we're looking for as well as a variety of perspectives. >> discuss the conflict of issue issue because i want to get that. >> we actually look very closely at conflict of issue which we look at both whether or not there are financial problems that are real or appearances there and do a thorough analysis of investment opportunities, of financial considerations. we recently established the new process looking at that externally, and we look at issues whether they are perceived or real, do them publicly, transparently, take comment the every step of the way to ensure the panel has the credibility it needs to speak from a sound science and
>> the science -- for the science advisory board, we believe epa meets and exceeds responsibilities. our legal requirements and transparent and look more closely to ensure that we look at the government board as well. we're proud of this, and when we do panels and put them together, we publish the consideration of the panel members, ask for comments on that that, and make sure the penalties put together are well-balanced and have all range of expertise we're looking for as well as a...
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Jan 31, 2013
01/13
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CSPAN2
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eighth-graders outperformed every other state in the nation in reading and math and we are second in science. [applause] our high school graduation rates are out and our dropout rate is down and were increasing the rate at which montana residents are getting college degrees faster than any other state in the nation. but we're not done. it's not where we start. it's where we finish. we know educated workforce is the foundation for prosperous economy. so that's actually commit to increasing number of adults with a postsecondary degree. our professional certification. let's commit to at least 60% over the next decade. that's an ambitious goal. work 40%. the future of the state will be shaped on these goals and what our workforce is. i've asked the commissioner of higher education to join me in committing to school. i asked the same of you because we can't do it without you. this is one of those goals that we are in it together. it included proposals in this budget that do this and medicine that direction, offering college classes to more high school students will help you recognize higher educa
eighth-graders outperformed every other state in the nation in reading and math and we are second in science. [applause] our high school graduation rates are out and our dropout rate is down and were increasing the rate at which montana residents are getting college degrees faster than any other state in the nation. but we're not done. it's not where we start. it's where we finish. we know educated workforce is the foundation for prosperous economy. so that's actually commit to increasing...
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96
Nov 18, 2013
11/13
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CSPAN2
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eye 96
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politics has none of the elements of poetry and science but think of where they get the politics wrong even science says corrupted remember the late 1940's stalin decided that genetics remains the transition of characteristics that was proven 100 years earlier to be not true but stalin insisted on a new soviet genetics and do it and to not of the ultimate expression of the power of the corrupted and really everything that is hard and beautiful. that is why so many who want to wash their hands of today and understandably so is sovereign and must be. why i like medicine to enter a life of politics because in the end everything depends on getting the politics right. that is why because of what matters most in the end it is politics. and the book about hyper proliferation in the age we are about to enter into that i will not see that my age -- the age my son will live in it begins with the story of the great physicist. he is the man with the challenger disaster he could explain everything actually one of the young the scientists at lowe's alamos in would amuse himself in the spare hours by
politics has none of the elements of poetry and science but think of where they get the politics wrong even science says corrupted remember the late 1940's stalin decided that genetics remains the transition of characteristics that was proven 100 years earlier to be not true but stalin insisted on a new soviet genetics and do it and to not of the ultimate expression of the power of the corrupted and really everything that is hard and beautiful. that is why so many who want to wash their hands...
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water pressure that's available to them again though this is something that we don't have the adequate science or monitoring underway to pinpoint if this is a consequence of nestle's operation or not because of the overarching failure of the provincial government to really prioritize regulation of how groundwater. as an activist i just wanted a few a personal question do you think water is a human right and how does a personally make you feel that peter brady back the former c.e.o. nestle chairman said you know water in this way is an extreme view. so bizarre and quite delusional really but and yes the idea that there is not a human right is. the. reasonable radical perspective i mean given the fact that our bodies are more than seventy five percent made of water you know that really we couldn't go we could we could go barely hours maybe days without water to really survive when people start talking about water that water not as a human rights you know that it is something that could essentially be withheld from people. particularly based on a inability to pay framework so that's a that's a ma
water pressure that's available to them again though this is something that we don't have the adequate science or monitoring underway to pinpoint if this is a consequence of nestle's operation or not because of the overarching failure of the provincial government to really prioritize regulation of how groundwater. as an activist i just wanted a few a personal question do you think water is a human right and how does a personally make you feel that peter brady back the former c.e.o. nestle...
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science technology innovation all the latest developments from around russia we've got the future covered. speak. out. a little. on their way to and talk to the crew of the i can to make sure that a face many challenges. crashing on to rocks trapped in pack ice in extreme conditions anything can happen and always comes up with surprises you have to keep your eyes open because if there's always something going wrong the ship carries huge reserves of water food fuel as well as helicopters and people able to survive extreme conditions they're ready for anything even an apocalypse she's really an incredible ship calling all antarctica stations this is going to make a field of radio check please respond. russia says it all had evidence to the united nations that could implicate syrian rebels in last month's chemical attack as a senior diplomat criticizes international inspectors waiting to consider the data also. a large group of protesters have clashed with the police the police are holding their ground right now as you can see those fires behind me great police used tear gas to disperse riot
science technology innovation all the latest developments from around russia we've got the future covered. speak. out. a little. on their way to and talk to the crew of the i can to make sure that a face many challenges. crashing on to rocks trapped in pack ice in extreme conditions anything can happen and always comes up with surprises you have to keep your eyes open because if there's always something going wrong the ship carries huge reserves of water food fuel as well as helicopters and...
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113
Feb 7, 2013
02/13
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CSPAN
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medical science. i'm a physician. do you have any suggestions about how we can look at the regulatory burden and tax burden besides passing my jobs bill, which i think is critical to bring the manufacturing jobs back to america, can you give us some suggestions about what we can do to look at the regulatory burden as well as the tax burden and give us help in getting these shackles off of business and industry, our job creators, so we can start having a strong manufacturing industry here in this country? and thank you for, i want to thank you for texas instruments having the manufacturing that y'all do here in this country. >> mr. broun, the simplest way i think about this is, we have 5% of the world's population. which says 95% of it is somewhere else. when we think about economic growth for our country, and for companies that are headquarters in the u.s., we have to have policies and plans that let u.s.-headquartered companies compete tpwhrobally because it ends up creating great opportunities and great economic gro
medical science. i'm a physician. do you have any suggestions about how we can look at the regulatory burden and tax burden besides passing my jobs bill, which i think is critical to bring the manufacturing jobs back to america, can you give us some suggestions about what we can do to look at the regulatory burden as well as the tax burden and give us help in getting these shackles off of business and industry, our job creators, so we can start having a strong manufacturing industry here in...
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Apr 23, 2013
04/13
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CSPAN2
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eye 73
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and i'm happy to have so many key members of my science team who are here today including my chief science adviser, john holder, who's here. there's john. nih director francis collins. there's francis right there, the tall guy. we've got acting director of the national science foundation, cora merit, there's cora, and we've got real life astronaut and nasa administrator charles bolton. where's charlie? there he is right there. we need to make in this a priority, train an army of new teachers in these subject areas and to make sure that all of us as a country are lifting up these subjects for the respect that that they deserve. you know, and one of the things i'm concerned about is that as a culture, you know, we're great consumers of technology, but we're not always properly respecting the people who are in the labs and, you know, behind the scenes creating the stuff that we now take for granted. and we've got to give the millions of americans who work in science and technology not only the kind of respect they deserve, but also new ways to engage young people. so today i'm proud to announ
and i'm happy to have so many key members of my science team who are here today including my chief science adviser, john holder, who's here. there's john. nih director francis collins. there's francis right there, the tall guy. we've got acting director of the national science foundation, cora merit, there's cora, and we've got real life astronaut and nasa administrator charles bolton. where's charlie? there he is right there. we need to make in this a priority, train an army of new teachers in...
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253
May 23, 2013
05/13
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WTTG
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this is science class at the congressional schools of virginia. >> we want to make science fun. we want children to be excited about science at a young age. >> the private school in fairfax county is catching students inti middle school and teaching themg to think about science in a different way through the jason project. for part of the course, students learn about energy generation and conassumption through building a virtual city in a video game format. one was working on handmade generators during our visit.ur >> all the jobs in the futureutu will be connected. how do we get kids to really be on gauged in science? it's the high touch and the high tech piece a trip aboard the the research stressel. bob ballard who founded the jason project. the 8th grader one is of lucky ones. i think i can use the opportunity to shape my life and other people's lives. ea long with other students submitted he ises is a. h >> they'll drive the ship and plot the course for the ship. they'll spend time watching the rov's, the remotely operateded vehicles that will be in exploration and so the s
this is science class at the congressional schools of virginia. >> we want to make science fun. we want children to be excited about science at a young age. >> the private school in fairfax county is catching students inti middle school and teaching themg to think about science in a different way through the jason project. for part of the course, students learn about energy generation and conassumption through building a virtual city in a video game format. one was working on...
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76
Dec 13, 2013
12/13
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CSPAN
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he got his bachelor of science and graduated from dartmouth medical school in 1995, served as chiefy close by resident of neurology and university of maryland in 1999 and to the great pleasure has chosen to call norcross home where he is the director of clinical research at the multiple sclerosis center in atlanta and president of the of docs for patient care. it's with great pleasure that i welcome you today, dr. english. thank you for what you do not only on the committee but for back home. to committee rules, i ask all three of our witnesses to rise to take the oath. lease raise your right hand. do you solemnly swear or affirm the testimony you are about to give would be the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth? please be seated. let the record reflect that all witnesses answered in the affirmative. dr. english, you have time in your practice to watch c-span? for all of you, i will give you the brief. ask, first of all, that all your opening statements in their entirety be placed in the record and in addition, any pertinent or extraneous material you would like to subm
he got his bachelor of science and graduated from dartmouth medical school in 1995, served as chiefy close by resident of neurology and university of maryland in 1999 and to the great pleasure has chosen to call norcross home where he is the director of clinical research at the multiple sclerosis center in atlanta and president of the of docs for patient care. it's with great pleasure that i welcome you today, dr. english. thank you for what you do not only on the committee but for back home....